Before the age of cellphones, it would have been a memory.
I might have been tempted to tell people about the somewhat surreal scene I happened upon, but somehow, “I saw two pigeons on the sidewalk pecking at a pink donut” wouldn’t have done it justice.
Because we live in a digital age, I have, by way of a few cellphone photos, a visual story to share. And the story brings to mind Jem Cohen’s 2012 film Museum Hours.
The subject of looking is the central theme of Museum Hours…Cohen suggests that it is not merely looking that matters, but presence — a type of looking that requires quiet and stillness and openness to the unexpected.
From “Jem Cohen’s Museum Hours: A Film with Big Ideas and Small Details“
Celebrated as a meditation on the crossings between life and art, Museum Hours tells the story of a gentle, platonic friendship that develops between Johann (played by Bobby Sommer), a guard in Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum, and Anne (played by Mary Margaret O’Hara), a Canadian visitor in town to tend to a cousin who is in a coma in a Vienna hospital.
The film is centred in the Kunsthistorisches, with a focus on Johann’s favourite place in the museum, the Bruegel Room, where he says “you will always see something new.”
Sometimes Breugel gives us a world made from the union of the fantastic and the real, so that one becomes the other.
Spoken by the gallery guide in Jem Cohen’s Museum Hours


Cohen (and Johann) deftly and thoughtfully juxtapose details from the museum’s paintings, such as a broken eggshell, with shots of similar imagery from Vienna’s modern city streets — a discarded cigarette butt, a beer can.
As Johann and Anne venture out and start to take in the entire city as if it were a gallery, this juxtaposition draws parallels between past and present; between the sanctity of the art museum and life in the city that surrounds it.
It takes a certain way of looking to find points of familiarity and connection in the medieval chaos of a Breugel painting, as Johann does.
And in the middle of a bustling city, it can be a challenge to find the space required to stay open and attuned to unexpected scenes.
The quiet space that I inhabited as I watched the pigeons eat their donut might explain my link between these avian friends and Jem Cohen’s film. So might the fact that the scene wouldn’t look out of place in a Breugel painting.
But I believe it is best explained through Cohen’s themes of transience, transcendence and connection — between lonely individuals, between street and gallery, and across time.
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